Also, I apparently freed 1.44GiB of disk space, after a restart of course. I'm just glad it fits on my 40GiB VHD is all.
Yeah, you're probably right about that. The whole passive goal is more of an enthusiast theme for me though, than a practical noise-saver. :P
Skylake's iGPUs are taking up arms with better performance too, though! And despite having leaps and bounds better graphics than Sandy Bridge they still have that 5-10% perf. increase over Haswell. So I'd say Intel worked pretty hard on their release this time around. It also means I can wait out getting a GPU until I feel like buying one for those super-cool shaders in Minecraft, lol.
I wonder why? WD Blacks are really good drives, if you're looking for boot perf., definitely go with them. :)
That's a pretty smart baseline rule, IMO. I just can't help but geek out at some of the higher-end stuff, which is why I'm buying them! It's just too cool.
Go with Kingston, they're cool too you know. ;)
Any reason why you wouldn't? :o
I was happy my Cougar Solution has good cable management too, despite being only $50. Things tucked so nicely in there, if I sleeved the cables it would be 100%. :D
If I were you I'd get a fully-modular SeaSonic PSU. Those should be high enough quality for your needs, and... you don't wanna mess with something that'd break in 3 years anyway.
One of my subscribers to my
Pwenet build has this
extreme real-deal passive build he's making, and it helped me decide to just drop this build for now, get the good stuff I want, and when I pick it back up
do it right. Paid employment means I can finance custom metal cuts, among other things, which may possibly entail a totally custom case – something that would be really awesome to do. I'm going to have to study on how heat flows, though, so I don't make some nonsensical case that just looks alright. xD
I'm kinda bummed out that I largely missed Haswell for desktops. I mean, yeah, I could buy for a little while here, but it's going to be last gen so soon from now, you know? The only Haswell chip I worked with was a mobile Celeron, which, needless to say... got the hammer. :P I'm just disappointed in the design of my H97 board, but for $90 what did I expect really... I want a Z-series board regardless of whether I'm overclocking or not. Though I'll probably want to do those things still, so maybe I do need it, eh? RAM overclocking is really a thing for me.
I'm certainly not set on DDR4 RAM and what module/style I wanna go with, but as far as DDR3 goes... HyperX Savage all the way. It covers 1600MHz at a nice CAS 9 latency, and 2400MHz at CL11. I dunno what I'd buy for 3GHz DDR3 honestly, but I really like Kingston :P (I'm really bothered by RAM frequencies not sitting on a zero or two.) Though as far as storage goes, I am set on setting up a NAS before I go dumping HDDs into towers or anything. I'm a lot more comfortable having all of my terminals run off of SSDs, and having shared storage over the network... which I've found the
need for as of recently. My little external drive that I have to constantly switch back and forth between PCs isn't cutting it anymore.
Cases are always a big heat-of-the-moment hunt for me. I have to get one that looks just like I want it to. So far I'm happy with a couple Cougar case models, and though I have looked at a lot of the "mainstream" cases I often feel like the case defines the personality of the PC, so I want it to be original, at least somewhat, you know?
For GPUs, a 750 Ti is likely enough for me, buuut... I want a 4GiB GTX 960, so I can SLI when it's old and rusty. xD That's ample performance for my light needs for a long time when you think about it. Doing Minecraft on Linux and taking advantage of dem open-source Nvidia drivers like a boss. As far as a PSU goes, I'll probably pick something mainstream, and SeaSonic too. For my passive build I was going to get a pricy-af 400W 80+ Platinum fanless PSU, but thankfully that can wait, haha.
Say, should I go Micro ATX with my Skylake PC?